Statewide 700 MHz Itinerant/Interoperability frequencies are for "Temporary Bases/Repeaters" probably to be used for future operations.
WPTZ785 is the statewide license for 700 MHz.. No known use at this type, there are currently listed in the Wiki page.

All dispatch/car-to-car communications. Low band still gets used for summaries, EAS testing, unresponsive status checks, and whenever there's a problem with Moswin. There is also a fair amount of traffic on the 42.0 state wide car-to-car channel. (1/14)

*774.95625 P25 has been confirmed in use as a mobile extender (in the St Charles County area) [Note: With the squelch all the way down you can hear data bursts every 12 seconds] (formerly 774.95625 100.0 PL - Law Mobile Extender heard in St Peters 11/13; P25 heard in use-12/13)

Troop H is using both MOSWIN and Low-band for communications (12/13) Low band still gets used for summaries, EAS testing, unresponsive status checks, and whenever there's a problem with Moswin. There is also a fair amount of traffic on the 42.0 state wide car-to-car channel. (1/14)

Website Capitol Police Communications and Command Center is a point of contact for those who need police services in the Capitol Complex 24-hours a day, seven days a week. Communications operators utilize computer terminals that interface with the Missouri Uniform Law Enforcement System (MULES), the National Crime Information Center (NCIC), the Missouri Department of Revenue Motor Vehicle and Operator files, and other information systems.

Operates a system of VHF repeaters around some of Missouri's larger water-recreational areas. Each repeater is linked to the dispatch center located in Jefferson City. Repeaters located in the same area tend to have the same frequencies but different PL tones to key them. The unit-to-unit channel is the same as the repeater output.

Currently narrowbanding their VHF system, so no known timetable is known when they may move to the MOSWIN system.